My Worst Reselling Mistake

Its not often that we talk about our failures in public. Today I’m sharing my worst reselling mistake. This is, if you will, a “B side” event, for those of you that remember records or cassette tapes. If not, the short answer is – the “B Side” is usually the lesser recordings.

My Worst Reselling Mistake

I was ecstatic the moment I saw this deal:

Previously, DJI Phantom’s “color codes” had been:

Red – Standard

Silver – Advanced

Gold – Professional

Now, that was at least my understanding… It turns out that the color coding seemed to be more associated with the quality of the camera. The DJI Phantom 3 Professional’s camera was 4k, the DJI Phantom 4 also had a 4K camera.

Unfortunately, it didn’t become apparent to me, until a week or two later, that the DJI Phantom 4 had a shorter distance range than the DJI Phantom 4 Pro. This proved to be a pretty big difference. Most–but not all–buyers of my units submitted returns. I can’t really blame them.

Of course, not knowing the significant difference, I was selling this unit, that I bought at $800 for, $1245. And at the time, they were selling like hot cakes! It took a few weeks before the returns started rolling in.

But Wait, it gets better!

One of those returns, which qualifies as my most egregious return ever, was completely stripped! If you don’t believe me, take a look at the photos:

Note, that usually DJI Phantoms have cables and motors at the end of the struts — the buyer actually pulled all the motors and even the electric wire harnesses!

If you thought that was bad, they thought of nearly everything. They even included some ruled paper to emulate the weight of a drone:

Wrapping Up

I totally made a mistake with this. I’d argue that despite making a mistake, that some–or at least one–decided to be exceptionally fraudulent. There’s no fun there, whether or not it is your Worst Reselling Mistake.

Comments

Yeah — the amount of profit was insane though, had the product really worked out. I still ended up making money on the 2 sales that stuck, and the 1 return that got stripped for parts. Needless to say, I seldom do drones of that size now.

@Ryan – I sure did. Things worked out pretty well on this one, luckily – but the key part was the fact that I incorrectly matched the product I was buying (and selling) to the Amazon Listing, which really made it my worst mistake.

@ABC All but the 1 that was worst, I returned to Adorama, because it was still within the return policy. The one that was stripped for parts took about a month to get Amazon to make me whole, at the sale price (which built in some decent profit). Generally, returns that look good, I sell as like-new with photos, some I’ll return to the store, but things that are stripped of everything, I’ll always put in a case with Amazon for reimbursement. Here’s another link on Returns btw: https://saverocity.com/taggingmiles/expert-guide-to-fulfillment-by-amazon-dealing-with-returns/

Wow, you got lucky. Usually Amazon tells me to pound sand when they accept bogus returns and then fully refund the buyer. It’s why I no longer resell tablets. I’ve had a few buyers claim the item was never delivered despite tracking showing it was delivered. Amazon always sides with the buyer and fully refunds full amount including shipping. Amazon enabled fraud on such a large scale, and they don’t care because it costs them nothing to allow it to happen to 3rd party sellers. Unfortunately it’s a cost of doing business on Amazon’s marketplace.

@Ken – I have found if I include a reasonably thought out argument and photos, Amazon is reasonable. Although I’ve had the similar thing of the item never delivered, but they reimburse 30 or so days later.

Usually the buyer will immediately file an A-Z claim which is a dead giveaway. I had one buyer file the claim BEFORE tracking even said it was delivered. Clearly they had the item in hand and then filed the claim.

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